"Now, what do I observe upon coolly
proceeding1 to this
investigation2? A
puny3 creature, always inferior to man,
infinitely4 less attractive than he, less ingenious, less wise, constructed in a disgusting manner
entirely5 opposite to what is capable of pleasing a man, to what is able to delight him... a being three-quarters of her life untouchable, unwholesome, unable to satisfy her mate throughout the entire period Nature
constrains6 her to childbearing, of a sharp turn of humor,
shrill7, shrewish, bitter, and
thwart8; a
tyrant9 if you allow her privileges, mean,
vile10, and a
sneak11 in
bondage12; always false, forever
mischievous13, constantly dangerous; in short, a being so
perverse14 that during several convocations the question was very soberly
agitated16 at the Council of Macon whether or not this
peculiar17 creature, as distinct from man as is man from the ape, had any reasonably
legitimate18 pretensions19 to classification as a human; but this
quandary20 might be merely an error of the times; were women more favorably viewed in earlier ages? Did the Persians, the Medes, the Babylonians, the Greeks, the Romans honor this
odious22 sex we are able to dare make our
idol23 today?
Alas24! I see it oppressed everywhere, everywhere rigorously
banished26 from affairs,
condemned27 everywhere,
vilified28,
sequestered29, locked up; women treated, in a word, like beasts one stables in the barn and puts to use when the need arises. Do I pause a moment at Rome? then I hear the wise Cato exclaim from the heart of the ancient world's capital: 'Were women lacking to men, they would yet hold conversation with the Gods.' I hear a Roman
censor30 begin his
harangue31 with these words: 'Gentlemen, were we ever to find a means to live without women, thereupon unto us should true happiness be known.' I hear the Greek theater
resound32 to these lines intoned: 'O Zeus! what reason was it obliged thee to create women? couldst not have given being to humankind by better devices and wiser, by schemes which in a word would have spared us this female
pestilence33?' I see this same Greek race hold that sex in such high contempt legislation was needed to oblige a
Spartan34 to reproduce, and one of the penalties decreed in those enlightened republics was to compel a
malefactor35 to
garb36 himself in a woman's
attire37, that is to say, to wear the raiments of the
vilest38 and most scorned creature of which man had acquaintance.
"But without inquiring for examples in ages at such a great remove from ours, with what sort of an eye is this wretched sex still viewed upon the earth's surface? How is it dealt with? I
behold39 it
imprisoned40 throughout Asia and serving there as slave to the barbarous
whims41 of a despot who
molests42 it,
torments44 it, and turns its sufferings into a game. In America I find a naturally
humane45 race, the Eskimos, practicing all possible acts of beneficence amongst men and treating women with all imaginable severity: I see them
humiliated46, prostituted to strangers in one part of the world, used as currency in another. In Africa, where without doubt their station is yet further degraded, I notice them
toiling47 in the manner of beasts of burden, tilling the soil,
fertilizing48 it and sowing seed, and serving their husbands on their knees only. Will I follow Captain Cook in his newest discoveries? Is the charming
isle49 of Tahiti, where
pregnancy50 is a crime sometimes meriting death for the mother and almost always for the child, to offer me women enjoying a happier lot? In the other islands this same
mariner51 charted, I find them beaten,
harassed52 by their own offspring, and
bullied53 by the husband himself who
collaborates54 with his family to
torment43 them with additional
rigor25.
"Oh, Therese I let not all this astonish you, nor be more surprised by the general pre-eminence accorded men over their wives in all epochs: the more a people is in harmony with Nature, the better will be its use of her laws; the wife can have no relation to her husband but that of a slave to his master; very decidedly she has no right to pretend to more cherished titles. One must not mistake for a
prerogative55 the ridiculous abuses which, by degrading our sex, momentarily elevates yours: the cause for these
travesties56 must be sought out,
enunciated57, and
afterward58 one must only the more constantly return to reason's sagacious counsels. Well, Therese, here is the cause of the temporary respect your sex once upon a time enjoyed and which it still
misuses59 today while they who
perpetuate60 it are
unaware61 of what they are doing.
"In the Gaul of long ago, that is to say, in that one part of the world where women were not totally treated as slaves, women had the habit of
prophesying62, of predicting the happy event: the people fancied they
plied63 their trade successfully only because of the intimate commerce they doubtless had with the Gods; whence they were, so to speak, associated with the sacerdotal and enjoyed a measure of the consideration
lavished64 upon priests. French
chivalry65 was founded upon these
inanities66 and finding them favorable to its spirit, adopted them: but what happened next was what happens always: the causes became extinct, the effects were preserved; chivalry vanished, the prejudices it nourished
persevered67. This ancient
veneration68 accorded for no sound reason could not itself be
annihilated69 when what founded the illusion had dissipated: we no longer stand in
awe70 of witches, but we
reverence71 whores and, what is worse, we continue to kill each other for them. May such
platitudes72 cease to influence these our philosophers' minds, and restoring women to their true position, may the intelligent spirit conceive them, as Nature indicates, as the wisest peoples acknowledge, to be nothing but individuals created for their pleasures, submitted to their caprices, objects whose
frailty73 and wickedness make them deserving of
naught74 but contempt.#p#分页标题#e#
"But not only, Therese, did all the peoples of the earth enjoy the most extensive rights over their women, there were even to be found certain races which condemned women to death immediately they were born into the world, and of their numbers retained only those few necessary to the race's reproduction. The Arabs known as Koreish
interred75 their daughters at the age of seven upon a mountain near Mecca, because, said they, so vile a sex appeared to them unworthy of seeing the light; in the seraglio of the King of Achem, the most
appalling76 tortures are
applied77 as punishment for the
mere21 suspicion of infidelity, for the slightest disobedience in the service of the prince's
lusts78, or as soon as his women inspire his distaste; upon the banks of the River Ganges they are obliged to
immolate79 themselves over their husbands' ashes, for they are
esteemed80 of no further purpose in the world once their lords are able to enjoy them no more; in other regions they are hunted like wild beasts, 'tis an honor to kill a quantity of them; in Egypt they are sacrificed to the Gods; they are
trampled81 under foot in Formosa if they become pregnant; German law condemned the man who killed a foreign woman to pay a fine of about ten crowns, nothing at all if the woman was his own or a courtesan; everywhere, to be brief, everywhere, I repeat, I see women humiliated,
molested82, everywhere sacrificed to the
superstition83 of priests, to the
savagery84 of husbands, to the playfulness of
libertines85. And because I have the misfortune to live amidst a people still so
uncouth86 as not to dare abolish the most ludicrous of prejudices, I should deprive myself of the rights Nature has granted me! I should
forgo87 all the pleasures to which these privileges give birth... Come, come, Therese, that's not just, no, 'tis unfair: I will
conceal88 my behavior because I must, but I will be
compensated89, in the retreat where I have exiled myself, and silently, for the absurd chains to which I am condemned by legislation, and here I will treat my wife as I like, for I find my right to do so lettered in all the universe's codes, graved in my heart, and sealed in Nature."
"And I advise you not to attempt it, Therese," Gernande answered; "the tree is too long out of the nursery; at my age one can advance a few steps in the career of evil, but not one toward good. My principles and my tastes have brought me joy since childhood, they have always been the unique bases of my conduct and actions: I will, who knows? go further, I have the feeling it could be done, but return? never; I have too great a horror for mankind's prejudices, I too sincerely hate their civilization, their
virtue91 and their Gods ever to sacrifice my penchants to them." From this moment I saw very clearly that nothing remained for me, in order either to
extricate92 myself from this house or to save the Countess, but the employment of strategems and
joint93 action with her.
During the year I had spent in the house, what I had allowed her to read in my heart was more than sufficient to
dispel94 any doubts she might have of my desire to serve her, and now she could not fail to divine what had at first prompted me to act differently. I became less guarded, then
spoke95; she
assented96; we settled upon a plan: it was to inform her mother, to expose the Count's
infamies97 to her eyes. Madame de Gernande was certain that unfortunate lady would hasten with all expedition to
sever15 her daughter's bonds; but how were we to approach her? for we were so securely imprisoned, so closely watched! Accustomed to coping with ramparts, I
gauged98 those upon which the terrace was raised: their height was scarcely thirty feet; there was no other enclosure in sight; once at the foot of the wall I thought one would find oneself already on the road through the forest; but the Countess, having been brought to this apartment at night and never having left it since, was unable to confirm my ideas. I agreed to attempt the descent; the letter Madame de Gernande wrote to her mother could not have been better phrased to melt and persuade her to come to the rescue of her most unhappy daughter; I slipped the letter into my
bosom99, I embraced that dear and attractive woman, then, as soon as night had fallen, aided by our bed
linen100, I slid to the ground outside the
fortress101. What had become of me, O Heaven? I discovered that instead of being outside the enclosure I was simply in a park, and in a park girt by walls which the quantity and
dense102 foliage103 of trees had
camouflaged104 from sight: these battlements were more than forty feet high, all of them
garnished105 at the top with broken glass, and of a
prodigious106 thickness... what was to become of me? Dawn was not far off: what would they think when I was found in a place into which I could not have come without a certain plan of escape? Would I be able to keep the Count's fury at bay? Was it not very likely that ogre would drink my blood to punish such an
offense107? To return was out of the question, the Countess had
drawn108 back the sheets; to knock at the door would be still more certainly to betray myself; a little more and I would have lost my head altogether and
ceded109 to the violent effects of my despair. Had I been able to recognize some pity in the Count's soul, I might perhaps have been
lulled110 into hopefulness, but a tyrant, a
barbarian111, a man who
detested112 women and who, he said, had long been seeking the occasion to immolate one by draining away her blood drop by drop in order to find out how many hours she would be able to last... No doubt about it, he was going to put me to the test. Knowing not what would happen or what to do, discovering dangers everywhere, I threw myself down beside a tree,
determined113 to await my fate and silently resigning myself to the Eternal's will.... The sun rose at last; merciful Heaven! the first object to present itself to me... is the Count himself: it had been frightfully warm during the night, he had stepped out to take a breath of air. He believes he is in error, he supposes this a specter, he
recoils114, rarely is courage a traitor's virtue: I get trembling to my feet, I fling myself at his knees.#p#分页标题#e#